KZNSeagull
Well-known member
At a complete tangent, my wife is convinced that Ronaldo wears eyeliner. Can anyone confirm this?
Ok, same scenario but the defender is on the ground with his leg flat, Ronaldo trips over his leg by dragging his foot along the ground (as they do) without changing direction and falls over, is that a foul?
In the original scenario, the defender is nowhere near the ball but does not trip the attacker, so if anything he is guilty of obstruction. Indirect free kick to Portugal at most.
"Whoever initiates contact" is the fouler.
It depends on the specific situation but if that example is not a penalty, it's because the attacker's movement is a lot more unnatural than Ronaldo's was.
Ronaldo was sprinting and Nacho left his left in front of him, trying to bring it away at the last second but failing. Ronaldo is under no obligation to try and avoid that leg. He will have seen Nacho coming, and could have avoided him if he wanted to, but then he wouldn't have won the penalty.
If Ronaldo left a trailing leg it's him who has made the effort to change the situation, he's actively done that. If Ronaldo carries on running he hasn't changed the situation - to avoid the player he would have to actively do so.
Similarly you don’t have to get out the way as defender. Though poor refs believe you should.
I'm not saying it was or wasn't a pen, but there was an alternative for Ronaldo. An alternative that was the norm in the first 130 years of football, until the post-Klinsmann era of "going to ground".
For CR to use his power, reactions and balance to beat the slight coming together, and go on and score/create.
What a shame that the game has changed this way, and week by week more fans and punters are acclimatising to new endless claim for penalties by supreme athletes.
At a complete tangent, my wife is convinced that Ronaldo wears eyeliner. Can anyone confirm this?
At a complete tangent, my wife is convinced that Ronaldo wears eyeliner. Can anyone confirm this?
My biggest problem with VAR is that it's far from being "tried and tested", yet they've implemented it in the biggest tournament in the world. It's like rolling out driverless cars tomorrow on the M25.
I need to watch the video on the technicalities of VAR, but from instinct surely the penalty decision in the Australia game shouldn't have been overturned as the Aussie defender's challenge wasn't a clear cut foul (proven by the debate following)? If the ref had given a penalty in the first place, I could understand the replay not giving him sufficient reason to overturn his original decision. However, I probably should watch the VAR video explanation first. However, one of the failure's of it so far seems to be that it is still subjective, displayed in the Argentina game where the ref was reluctant to look at a handful of incidents that would have been flagged in the Australia game.
One positive though: I don't think the time it has taken to review the incidents has ruined the flow of any of the games. It's all been done very quickly, and the fact that we can see the replays on the TV at the same time the ref is seeing them made me feel less lost as to what was going on.
If you dive and it's not given it seems to lead to nothing 98% of the time or occasionally a yellow. If you win it you get a penalty.
Would love to see penalties at the other end / red card / both for diving and suddenly we might not see it.
Just like wrestling and extreme hugging at every corner. Oh you want to block the keeper? Or grab a player's arms so he can't even jump? Fine but it's a yellow whichever team you're on and a pen if you're the defender.
The game is getting even more about who can con the ref for a 1-0 win rather than jumpers for goalposts etc.
The point is to get MORE decisions right. So far it has. There is obviously then the question of whether getting those decisions right is worth it, but there has been minimal delay throughout the tournament, so I don't really think that applies to this current implementation. VAR isn't going to make all decisions correct: it isn't designed to, but it should reduce the number which it so far has.
the Aussie defender's challenge wasn't a clear cut foul (proven by the debate following)
That's why fouls aren't defined by popular opinion, or objective characteristics. A foul is a foul if 'in the opinion of the referee' it is a foul. That's it. If the ref thinks it's a foul, then it is a foul, regardless of what everyone else thinks. Regardless of any ensuing debate.
VAR will not ensure we all agree with every decision made, it won't ensure the ref makes the decision anyone in particular wants him to. But, by the definition of the laws of the game, the right decision will (usually) be made.
Maybe eventually we'll all end up with buttons at our seats to vote in real time on every decision.